Germany, France push for easier debt restructuring in
euro zone
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[June 20, 2018]
By Jan Strupczewski and Luke Baker
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - France and Germany
want to make it easier to restructure sovereign debt in the euro zone by
introducing a stronger legal clause in newly issued bonds, a document
agreed by Berlin and Paris showed.
The document - what the European Union calls a roadmap - outlines the
French and German position on deepening euro zone integration. It will
be discussed by finance ministers on Thursday and by EU leaders on June
29th.
Specifically, the roadmap calls for improving "the existing framework
promoting debt sustainability" by strengthening collective action
clauses (CACs) in bonds.
Such clauses make it easier for a government to override a minority of
investors who oppose the terms of a proposed debt restructuring, and who
can stop the whole process by holding out for a better deal.
Bonds issued in the euro zone since 2013 have included CACs. The roadmap
proposes strengthening them with "single-limb aggregation", which would
allow for a single restructuring decision to encompass all bonds.
Existing CaCs require separate restructuring for separate types of bonds
issued by the government.
"If you include this single-limb approach in the CaCs that are part of
bond issues since 2013, you would make the decision- making for debt
restructuring easier, because you would have a single decision as to
whether it can be restructured and not one for each individual bond,"
one euro zone official said.
Berlin and Paris also made clear in their agreement that if a country
asks for help from the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) - the euro
zone bailout fund - the fund would have to assess whether its debt was
still sustainable or needed to be restructured.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron
leave after a press conference after their meeting at the German
government guesthouse Meseberg Palace in Meseberg, Germany, June 19,
2018. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke/File Photo
Such an option is already implied in the treaty setting up the ESM, but Germany
wanted it spelled out more clearly.
"When appropriate, the ESM may facilitate the dialogue between its Members and
private investors, following IMF practice," the two countries said in their
roadmap, assigning the ESM a key role in a potential debt restructuring.
The euro zone has so far seen a debt restructuring by Greece in 2012, the
biggest sovereign debt restructuring in history, and a much smaller bail-in of
investors in Cyprus in 2013.
Euro zone officials say laying out the rules for such operations would make them
"less ad hoc" and would also discipline profligate euro zone governments,
because markets would pay closer attention to their fiscal policies.
(Reporting By Jan Strupczewski, editing by Larry King)
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